Kind of hard not to return an indictment when you only have one side of a case presented to you.
Which is probably part of why on the federal level in 2010, only 11 out of 162,000 did not. A phrase that has seen an increase in use recently regarding US grand juries is " a prosecutor could persuade a grand jury to ""indict a ham sandwich". For better, worse, or neither though this is how we do it in this country. Being as the supreme court of the US is supposed to be the final arbiter of constitutionality, you could argue that the DA in Ferguson committed an unconstitutional act by acting counter to the statement of the supreme court in regards to presenting a case to a grand jury.
I know there are tons of Sony fanboys here on slashdot, but this is a bit absurd.
Did you mean anti-Sony fanboys? I've certainly never seen anybody here in Slashdot say anything positive about Sony.
What was this article but something positive about Sony? That said, if you haven't seen a Sony fanboy here yet, you haven't been around long enough. They're out there, believe me. I've been around long enough to encounter Sony, Microsoft, and Toyota fanboys here (sometimes all in one week). The only fanboys who are not allowed here are fanboys of President Obama or any other well-known democratic politician from the US.
innovations like the second screen PocketStation and the still untapped power of Remote Play and Gaikai game streaming.
The PocketStation was never released outside Japan and most playstation owners have likely never even heard of it, let alone have made use of it. And when you go in to "still untapped power", you venture deep into slashvertisement territory.
I know there are tons of Sony fanboys here on slashdot, but this is a bit absurd.
Love makes the world go 'round, with a little help from intrinsic angular momentum.